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Definition of teeter verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

teeter

verb
 
/ˈtiːtə(r)/
 
/ˈtiːtər/
[intransitive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they teeter
 
/ˈtiːtə(r)/
 
/ˈtiːtər/
he / she / it teeters
 
/ˈtiːtəz/
 
/ˈtiːtərz/
past simple teetered
 
/ˈtiːtəd/
 
/ˈtiːtərd/
past participle teetered
 
/ˈtiːtəd/
 
/ˈtiːtərd/
-ing form teetering
 
/ˈtiːtərɪŋ/
 
/ˈtiːtərɪŋ/
Idioms
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  1. to stand or move in an unsteady way so that you look as if you are going to fall
    • She teetered after him in her high-heeled shoes.
    • The car teetered on the edge of the cliff for a moment before plunging down.
    • The girls teetered across the field.
    Word Originmid 19th cent.: variant of dialect titter, from Old Norse titra ‘shake, shiver’.
Idioms
teeter on the brink/edge of something
  1. to be very close to a very unpleasant or dangerous situation
    • The country is teetering on the brink of civil war.
See teeter in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
previously
adverb
 
 
From the Word list
Oxford 3000
B1
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